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Formula One

After nearly 50 years, Renault has killed off its F1 engine programme

Sad times. And from 2026, Alpine is expected to take Mercedes engines instead

Published: 01 Oct 2024

This is an historic, sad and long-expected moment: Renault is to end its F1 engine programme after almost half a century in the sport.

It first entered F1 in 1977 with a new-fangled turbocharged engine, and but for a handful of years it’s been a constant presence on the grid ever since.

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Williams was the first team to win the constructors’ championship with Renault power in 1992, kickstarting a run of six straight titles. Two more distinct eras of success followed; as a works team between 2005 and 2006, and as a supplier to Red Bull between 2010 and 2013.

Its total of 12 championships puts it second on the all-time list, behind Ferrari’s haul of 16.

Meanwhile seven drivers have won the world title with Renault power: Nigel Mansell, Alain Prost, Michael Schumacher, Damon Hill, Jacques Villeneuve, Fernando Alonso and Sebastian Vettel.

Despite that glittering trophy cabinet, Renault’s engine operation has fallen behind the competition over the last decade since the introduction of F1’s turbo-hybrid rules: it is widely thought to have the least powerful engine on the grid, while the works team - which was rebranded as Alpine in 2021 - has fallen from finishing fourth that same year to ninth in 2024, with half a dozen races left.

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And with a new generation of hybrid engine regs due in 2026, Renault boss Luca de Meo has evidently decided that the team will be in better shape (and hundreds of millions better off) if it buys its engines rather than makes its own.

Reports suggest that a supply deal with Mercedes is already in the works, and Renault has confirmed that development of its own powertrain will wind up at the end of 2025.

The engine department at Viry-Chatillon will be transformed into the new Alpine Hypertech division, which is set to work on the group’s World Endurance Championship, Formula E and Dakar programmes, as well as cutting-edge battery tech and… an Alpine supercar. Ooh. Click this here link to read more about that.

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